GG_sm Lorna Mills and Sally McKay

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Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact

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zefrank


Comfortably behind the trend, as usual, I 've just found out (many thanks to Lauren and Rick) about www.zefrank.com. There is a lot of good entertainment on this site. My favourite so far is this deadpan faux doc on Homeland Security design."

- sally mckay 4-23-2004 5:55 pm [link] [3 comments]


teapot


- sally mckay 4-22-2004 9:18 am [link] [3 comments]


singing Na-na-na-na to Ottawa. Go Toronto May Police! (game 7, 2 minutes left, 4-1 Leafs)

- sally mckay 4-21-2004 5:34 am [link] [14 comments]


more cyborg notes

I watched part of a kid's show the other day and didn't get the name of it. I've scanned the TV Guide and Google and can't come up with it. In the show, a boy and his friends have a pal named "Cyborg" who hangs out with them. Cyborg is a half-man half-machine (go figure) and very tame and normal except that he seems to be an adult and is hanging around with nine-year olds. Anyhow, Cyborg gets kidnapped by a dude whose name I didn't catch. This guy used to be half-man, half-robot, but he had removed his human parts. Dude plans to help Cyborg become superior, like himself. Cyborg, strapped down on an operating table, protests " If you take out my biological parts, you remove the best part of me!" Dude responds, "But all of your memories and emotions will be downloaded into your improved body." A playback montage ensues in which we see Cyborg's memories; lots of hanging out with the kids at picnics and flying kites and whatnot. Cyborg manages to free himself from the operating table and pushes a button that reverse the setup so Dude sees the flashback as if with Cyborg's own eyes. It's a big surprise, "I never knew the world was so beautiful through human eyes." Yes, according to this show we humans have very good eyeballs and they make our experience...superior to robots' experience! Dude is stricken and upset, realising that without any human parts he is actually inferior to Cyborg. But it all ends happily cause the kids help him out, and undertake to teach him how to be more human by letting him join them and Cyborg in the park to throw the football around. I'm not making any of this up.

- sally mckay 4-20-2004 6:52 am [link] [10 comments]


There is an interesting thread here about Richard Serra and other things to do with minimalism.

- sally mckay 4-20-2004 2:28 am [link] [add a comment]


rainer ganahl bike still

Bicycling Tirana (dvd still), 2003. From Rainer Ganahl's website


I've only seen a few installations of Toronto's Images Festival so far. Rainer Ganahl's bicycle video, Bicycling Tirana at Paul Petro Contemporary Art (still up until April 24) is pretty great; pov at about chest height, cyclist riding into oncoming traffic, mostly with no hands. The mood is oddly calm and transcendent, even as the cars are coming straight for the camera. The other video, simply titled Bicycling also has a strange serenitiy. A cyclist, shot from above, dreamily, lazily, doubles a passenger round and round in a Manhattan intersection, unconcerned as cars whizz by. I recognise this particular cycling frame of mind, a kind of blissful remove from the anxieties of car-drivership, despite the constant proximity of the big metal beasts.

There are some confusing works on canvas, big paintings of website pages about a suicide bomber who used a bicycle, and a painting of the text of an email from a cyclist describing a traffic conflict with a car driver. These paintings are kind of pretty, but I think the labour of depicting the web in paint is a questionable use of time.

My favourite piece in the show is the mail art project, Use a Bicycle. Ganahl, who lives in New York, made his own postage stamps which say things like Al Queda, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Shock and Awe. He sent eight Twin Towers 9/11 souvenir postcards to the Toronto gallery, and they all arrived. In the message area of the card is the simple imperative assertion: use a bicycle. This juxtaposition of human-powered transportation against US conflict in the middle east is both audacious and obvious, a simple beautiful statement about the ramifications of various technologies. Rainer Ganahl is clearly in love with the bicycle, an attitude I comprehend. He has written a good bicycle-related artist statement that you can read here. It was this quote, however, from the Images Festival guide, that drew me into the show. "The bicycle is really -- next to the computer and the radio -- my most important instrument for making it through my life."

rainer ganahl postcard

use a bicycle, mail art project with self-made stamps (detail), 2004. From Rainer Ganahl's website.

- sally mckay 4-19-2004 7:23 am [link] [1 comment]